Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Stands By Tax Reforms As Government Says Deficit Smaller Than Expected

The Canadian Press, 19 Sep, 2017 12:30 PM
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government will go ahead with controversial tax reforms despite clear new evidence the economy is rebounding, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday.
     
    The Finance Department says the federal government ran a smaller deficit than the $23 billion that was forecast in the spring budget, ending the 2016-17 fiscal year with an actual deficit of $17.8 billion.
     
    Not surprisingly, Trudeau called the news a clear sign that the Liberal plan to grow the economy through helping the middle class is working.
     
    Still, the prime minister stood firmly by his government's controversial plan to eliminate tax provisions used by a growing number of small businesses, arguing it is part of the Liberal commitment to increase fairness.
     
    "We are moving forward to make the tax system fairer to stop the system that encourages wealthy Canadians to use private corporations to pay lower tax rates than the middle class," Trudeau told a news conference in Ottawa.
     
    The proposed changes have sparked a revolt by doctors, farmers, small business owners and even some backbench Liberal MPs, who have spoken publicly about the complaints they have been hearing from their constituents.
     
    Finance Minister Bill Morneau released the controversial, three-pronged plan in mid-July, including restrictions on the ability of business owners to lower their tax rate by sprinkling income to family members in lower tax brackets, even if those family members do no work for the business.
     
     
    He also proposed limiting tech use of private corporations to make passive investments in things like stocks or real estate and limiting the ability to convert the regular income of a corporation into capital gains, which are typically taxed at a lower rate.
     
    Trudeau said he will take the feedback into account to make sure the proposed changes target the wealthy, but said he will move ahead.
     
    "How exactly we move forward, what measures are in the legislation going forward is directly impacted and affected by the questions people ask, the concerns brought up," he said.
     
    "We were pleased to see a tremendous amount of response to our consultation paper — people with concerns, some legitimate, some less so — and we are folding them into the proposal that we will put forward, which will make our tax system fairer."
     
    Trudeau also suggested the promised legislation would be narrowly targeted.
     
    "We will ensure that we're doing it the right way, so that hard-working, middle-class small businesses, hard-working, middle-class farmers, do not get penalized that is aimed at wealthy Canadians."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Shot And Killed In Surrey, B.C.; Body Found In Vehicle In His Driveway

    Man Shot And Killed In Surrey, B.C.; Body Found In Vehicle In His Driveway
    The RCMP says officers were called to the city's Cloverdale area at about 8:45 p.m. after residents reported hearing multiple shots.

    Man Shot And Killed In Surrey, B.C.; Body Found In Vehicle In His Driveway

    Darshan Kang Placed On Medical Leave; Denies Allegations Of Sexual Harassment, Trudeau Non-Committal

    Darshan Kang Placed On Medical Leave; Denies Allegations Of Sexual Harassment, Trudeau Non-Committal
    Darshan Kang, a Calgary MP, is facing allegations that he repeatedly harassed one of his staff members and offered her money in order to keep the claims to herself.

    Darshan Kang Placed On Medical Leave; Denies Allegations Of Sexual Harassment, Trudeau Non-Committal

    Well-Known Far-Left Activist Jaggi Singh Rearrested In Connection With Quebec City Protest

    Quebec City police say in a news release an arrest warrant was issued for Jaggi Singh following an investigation into the Aug. 20 protest.

    Well-Known Far-Left Activist Jaggi Singh Rearrested In Connection With Quebec City Protest

    Mortgage Loan Insurance Business Down 33% For CMHC In Second-Quarter Report

    Mortgage Loan Insurance Business Down 33% For CMHC In Second-Quarter Report
    OTTAWA — Canada's national housing agency says new regulations introduced last fall decreased the size of the country's insured mortgage market by about 33 per cent year-over-year in the second quarter.

    Mortgage Loan Insurance Business Down 33% For CMHC In Second-Quarter Report

    Two-Year Sentence For Kelowna Gymnastics Coach Who Filmed Students Using Toilet

    Two-Year Sentence For Kelowna Gymnastics Coach Who Filmed Students Using Toilet
    Angelo Despotas, 48, betrayed the trust of the students he was supposed to be teaching, guiding and inspiring, provincial court Judge Jim Threlfall told a sentencing hearing in Kelowna, B.C.

    Two-Year Sentence For Kelowna Gymnastics Coach Who Filmed Students Using Toilet

    Men Between 19 And 59 New Focus Of B.C.'s Deadly Overdose Epidemic

    Men Between 19 And 59 New Focus Of B.C.'s Deadly Overdose Epidemic
    VANCOUVER — Too many men working in trades are overdosing on opioids, says a chief medical health officer in British Columbia who wants the industry to be involved in identifying interventions that could save lives.

    Men Between 19 And 59 New Focus Of B.C.'s Deadly Overdose Epidemic